The Kikundi (group/team) are covering so much new ground, each week, that it’s literally hard for any individual to keep up with it. They’re really on fire, as you can see.
As soon as things settle for me I’m going to dig in and read all their latest reports and draw attention to what I’m seeing, which is of course what they were seeing before they carried out the present campaigns
One reason I’m so far behind is because I’ve been busting my hump to get enough motorcycles for them–have purchased five, so far and after I take a breather and pay some more bills I’ll be getting them for the new distribution centers in Somalia, Ethiopia and Tanzania so that they can consolidate their material gains sooner, there. When the Kenyan army started routinely confiscating shipments of orgonite on the buses I knew that the kikundi needed at least minimal private transport and a way to get their orgonite around the new roadblocks.
Even though this has prevented me from doing my planned aerial orgonite campaigns for now I feel privileged to help them capitalize their distribution effort. One of the Europeans has been helping them capitalize their manufacturing process, which is another essential step in growing a business. It’s a miracle that they’ve gotten this far without capitalization but they agree with me that it’s better to do this in appropriate stages because that leaves them less vulnerable to agency sobotage.
As Nancy Awino (Dancan’s wife) has reported here, the Luo people, whom the originators of this East Africa effort are, are primarily fishermen, traditionally, who had spread to and around Lake Victoria from the Nile and Waw River systems n Sudan many centuries ago so it was appropriate that their first capitalization, earlier, was to acquire a couple of suitable fishing boats and motors for Lake Turkana and Lake Victoria and you can see what they’ve accomplished with those craft.
I’m eager to dive into their latest reports (I’m kind of like a fisherman, too [Image Can Not Be Found] ) and in a few days I’ll be out of the present maelstrom of other stuff and can devote the time and attention it needs.
~Don